Microsoft asks for rehearing in Word case

Nancy Gohring |
Jan. 11, 2010

But starting Monday, sales of Word won't have the feature at the heart of the dispute

SEATTLE, 8 JANUARY 2010 - Microsoft asked an appeals court for a rehearing in the patent case that requires the software giant to pay US$290 million in damages and prevents it from selling the current version of Word starting on Monday.

The suit charged Microsoft with using a patent owned by i4i in a feature in Word 2003 and 2007 that lets people create custom XML documents.

In December, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upheld an earlier judgment that left Microsoft with the damages and the injunction requiring it to stop selling copies of Word that include the feature.

Now Microsoft is asking the panel of judges primarily to reconsider the way that the damages figure was determined. "The petition details significant conflicts we believe the December 22 decision creates with established precedents governing trial procedure and the determination of damages, and we are concerned that the decision weakens judges' authority to apply appropriate safeguards in future patent trials," said Kevin Kutz, director of public affairs for Microsoft, in a statement.

In a statement, i4i said it expected Microsoft to file such a petition and that it looks forward to building its business now that Microsoft is required to stop selling the offending products.

Microsoft has said it will be prepared by Monday to sell copies of Word 2007 with the feature in question removed.

A response to Microsoft's rehearing request may not come for a while. Three judges will review it first, and they'll have seven days to either comply with or ignore it, signaling that they deny the request. If they deny it, the rest of the panel of judges will then have time to review the request.

A rehearing could result in reduced damages and changes to the injunction.